News

Sean the Science Kid” shares his passion for the brain with Dr. Sanjay Gupta. Together, they explore brain anatomy, discuss ...
These fascinating science facts prove that reality is often stranger—and a lot more interesting—than fiction These unbelievable science facts are actually true Even if you thought science ...
The title of Keith Cooper’s “Amazing Worlds of Science Fiction and Science Fact” echoes that of Amazing Stories, a magazine founded in the 1920s that was the first to be devoted to ...
Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen said during Question Time on Wednesday that the modern Liberal Party ...
Here are the morning's headlines for Friday, April 18th, 2025: Imagine that severe storms sent ice balls containing chemical slush raining down onto the ground. While that sounds like science fiction ...
Donald Trump’s health officials have been endorsing alternative facts in science to impose policies that contradict modern ...
The history of the Nutrition Facts label shows us how we got to this somewhat confusing, but helpful, set of facts printed on our food stuffs.
In the new movie "Twisters," Daisy Edgar-Jones is determined to make a tornado vanish using science and tech. Is that doable? We ask a tornado expert.
Tornado experts are impressed at much of the scientific accuracy of the blockbuster movie, 'Twisters' — for the most part.
In the 1940s, science fiction author Isaac Asimov theorized the concept of collecting the sun’s energy in space, then beaming that energy down to Earth.
The podcast ‘Does It Fly?’ asks whether the technology of Star Trek, Doctor Who and other popular sci-fi shows could really work.